On March 31, 1682, Henri de Tonti on a journey with René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle wrote that they camped at Maheoula, a Tangipahoa settlement. Pierre Le Moyne d'Ibervilleclaimed that the Tangipahoa settlement was an Acolapissa settlement and that they were of the same tribe. The Tangipahoa settlement was destroyed sometime in the 17th century. When La Salle reached the village he said he saw that it was burned and that there were bodies laying in the village. La Salle wrote that when he asked the Bayogoula tribe what had happened they claimed that the Tangipahoa village was destroyed by the Houma people. The remaining Tangipahoa tribe members are believed to have reunited with the Acolapissa and eventually merged with the Bayogoula and then the Houma.